Mary Anne Keeley: Difference between revisions
add persondata short description using AWB |
|||
Line 38: | Line 38: | ||
}} |
}} |
||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Keeley, Mary Anne}} |
{{DEFAULTSORT:Keeley, Mary Anne}} |
||
[[Category:English actresses]] |
[[Category:English stage actresses]] |
||
[[Category:1805 births]] |
[[Category:1805 births]] |
||
[[Category:1899 deaths]] |
[[Category:1899 deaths]] |
||
Line 45: | Line 45: | ||
[[Category:English theatre managers and producers]] |
[[Category:English theatre managers and producers]] |
||
[[Category:Actor-managers]] |
[[Category:Actor-managers]] |
||
[[Category:19th-century English actresses]] |
Revision as of 15:37, 8 September 2013
This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
|
Mary Anne Keeley, née Goward (22 November 1805 - 12 March 1899) was an English actress and actor-manager.
She was born at Ipswich, her father being a brazier and tinman. After some experience in the provinces, she first appeared on the stage in London on July 2, 1825, in the opera Rosina. It was not long before she gave up singing parts in favour of drama proper, where her powers of character-acting could have scope.
In June 1829 she married Robert Keeley (1793-1869), an admirable comedian, with whom she had often appeared. Between 1832 and 1842 they acted at Covent Garden, at the Adelphi with John Buckstone, at the Olympic with Charles Mathews, and at Theatre Royal, Drury Lane with William Charles Macready. In 1836 they visited America. In 1838 she made her first great success as Nydia, the blind girl, in a dramatized version of Bulwer-Lytton's The Last Days of Pompeii, and followed this with an equally striking impersonation of Smike in Nicholas Nickleby.
In 1839 came her decisive triumph with her picturesque and spirited acting as the hero of a play founded upon Harrison Ainsworth's Jack Sheppard. So dangerous was considered the popularity of the play, with its glorification of the prison-breaking felon, that the Lord Chamberlain ultimately forbade the performance of any piece upon the subject. It is perhaps mainly as Jack Sheppard that Keeley lived in the memory of playgoers, despite her long subsequent career in plays more worthy of her remarkable gifts.
Under Macready's management she played Nerissa in The Merchant of Venice, and Audrey in As You Like It. She managed the Lyceum Theatre with her husband from 1844 to 1847; acted with Benjamin Webster and Charles Kean at the Haymarket; returned for five years to the Adelphi; and made her last regular public appearance at the Lyceum in 1859. A public reception, organised by the artist Walter Goodman, was held for her at this theatre on her 90th birthday.
Keeley died in 1899 and is buried in Brompton Cemetery, London.
Mary Anne and Robert Keeley had two daughters, Mary Lucy (circa 1830-1870) and Louise (1835-1877), both of whom followed their parents on to the stage. Mary Lucy married the writer Albert Richard Smith, while Louise married the criminal advocate Montagu Williams, later Queen's Counsel.
See also
See Walter Goodman, The Keeleys On Stage and At Home, London: Bentley and Son 1895.
References
- public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
{{cite encyclopedia}}
: Missing or empty|title=
(help) This article incorporates text from a publication now in the